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STORM IN SYDNEY.

SENSATIONS IN HARBOUR. SYDNEY, June 23. A spell of crisp wintry weatherj during which the rainless stretch which started early last summer, being relieved only by a passing deluge about two months ago, has continued, reducing the soil to bone-dryness, and bringing ever nearer the-spectre o.f a water famine in the city, was suddenly terminated with a storm of extraordinary violence on Tuesday. Rain started to fail 'in torrents almost all over the State on Monday night, and by. 4 a.m. a gale was raging and howling along the coast at the rate of 70 miles an hour. With unabated violence the cyclone swept over the city until the day was advanced, downpour after downpour drenching the pedestrians, who had almost forgotten how to. protect themselves : against such volumes of water. Early in the morning rush to the city the steamers which daily carry thousands' of people from. Manly to the city, a trip of about five miles, involving a crossing-,,immediately inside the heads, had to be stopped owing to the narrow escape from disaster of one of them. Mountainous seas were rolling through the great gap in the heads, and breaking in. clouds of foam on the Middle Head, inside the harbour. In the track of these the brave Jhttle steamfers ploughed her way head on/ In the middle of the crossing, however/ passengers on the' upper deck saw a succession of three great rollers come bounding along from the ocean. Over the first the Burra-bra rode r well enough., but the second was upon her while she was still in the trough-like wake of the first, and as the passengers afterwards related, she was struck and enveloped in a towering wall of green water. Windows and doors were smashed in all directions, drenched passengers sprawled about clinging to anything they could grasp, and all for some moments was shattered glass, spray, and rushing water. Pour of the passengers had to be conveyed to the Sydney hospital' when the steamer reached- the Circular Quay, a forlorn spectacle which was quite/an object of curiosity. Fortunately no serious injuries were caused, and the immediate stoppage of the service prevented a repetition of the perilous, adventure, residents having to make a long do r tour by tram in order to the city. As well as this, several steamers broke from their moorings, and narrowly escaped disaster, on the rocks. Some small craft were swept ashore, and the great floating crane Titan, with the boilers for the new steamer Fordsdale, which is under sonstruetion for the Commonwealth Lane, met with a similar fate,, being driven ott ; to the rocks at Woolwich. A few miles down the coast, just beyond the Botany Bay opening, the coastal -steamer Belbowrie went in the early morning. She is on a sandy bottom, and hopes are .entertained,, that she may be refloated. ‘ She is a twinscrew steamer of 218 tons, and has , been carrying general cargo and coal between Sydney and south coast ports of New South Wales,for Kirton and ■Earnshaw, of Sydney, for the past IT years- The country districts have benefited almost all over the State to the extent of up to 4in of rain in three days.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19230810.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 10 August 1923, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
535

STORM IN SYDNEY. Shannon News, 10 August 1923, Page 1

STORM IN SYDNEY. Shannon News, 10 August 1923, Page 1

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